Know About Charlie Barnet—The Front Man of "The Blackest White Band of Them All"
Saxophonist and bandleader Charlie Barnet was born into a wealthy family. His grandfather was Charles Frederick Daly, a vice-president for the New York Central Railroad, banker, and businessman. His father, a successful lawyer, wanted young Charlie to follow him into the family business. But Charlie had other plans.
As a boy, Barnet attended exclusive
boarding schools in New York and Chicago, where he learned to play the piano
and saxophone. He often skipped school to listen to local jazz bands play.
By the age of sixteen, Barnet had
performed with Jean Goldkette's band and in New York, where he joined Frank
Winegar's Pennsylvania Boys, playing tenor sax. By 1931, Barnet had relocated
to Los Angeles with the hopes of landing work in local bands or Hollywood
films. He appeared as an extra in a movie while trying to obtain employment
with local bands. Unable to find consistent work, in late 1932, Charlie
returned to the east coast and persuaded a friend at the CBS radio network’s
artist bureau to try him out as an orchestra leader. He was just 18 years old.
Fueled by family resources, in 1933,
Barnet decided to try his hand at leading his own band. In October of that
year, he landed his first recording contract but was not a great success for
most of the early ‘30s, regularly changing styles and reorganizing his band. In
1935, he attempted to premiere swing music at the Hotel Roosevelt in New
Orleans, where Louisiana's controversial Governor, Huey "The
Kingfish" Long, disliked the new sound and literally had the band run out
of town on false charges. Barnet was subsequently forced to disband, but he
arranged with fellow bandleader Joe Haymes to take several of his now
unemployed sidemen while he went on an extended vacation to Havana.
1936 saw another swinging version of
the Barnet band, featuring the up-and-coming vocal quartet The Modernaires (who
later found success with Glenn Miller’s band), but that attempt quickly folded.
Ultimately finding success, Barnet
was responsible for launching the careers of several notable artists, including
pianist Bill Miller (who later accompanied Frank Sinatra and Frank Sinatra Jr.
for decades) and singers Mary Ann McCall and Lena Horne. Additionally, his band
at times included Buddy DeFranco, Neal Hefti, Barney Kessel, and Oscar
Pettiford, while later versions of the band included Maynard Ferguson, Doc
Severinsen, and Clark Terry. Trumpeter Billy May was an arranger in the Charlie
Barnet Orchestra before joining Glenn Miller in 1940.
The height of Barnet's popularity
came between 1939 and 1944, a period that began with his hit recording of
"Cherokee," written by Ray Noble and arranged by Billy May. In
1944, Barnet had another huge hit with "Skyliner." He also enjoyed
success with recordings of "The Wrong Idea," "Scotch &
Soda," and "In a Mizz." His own saxophone style was influenced
by Coleman Hawkins on tenor and Johnny Hodges on alto. Barnet was also noted
for his beautiful and stylish soprano sax playing.
To listen to Charlie Barnet’s songs,
you can tune into any top swing music radio station.
Barnet was one of the first
bandleaders to integrate his band, with more black musicians working for him
than any of the other popular white bandleaders. Trumpeters Roy Eldridge and
Frankie Newton and bassist John Kirby joined in 1937. Lena Horne was one of
Barnet's early vocalists. Barnet was even booked to perform at the Apollo
Theater in Harlem, which was unheard of for a mostly white band, and his
performance there broke all attendance records. Barnet’s swinging style and
personnel integration led other musicians to refer to his band as "The
Blackest White Band of Them All".
In 1939, The Barnet Band was booked
into the Palomar Ballroom in Los Angeles. A scant four years earlier, the
Palomar had been the site of Benny Goodman’s famous performances that are
credited as being the 'start' of the swing era. Over the summer, the Palomar
was remodeled. A modern cooling system was installed, cocktail lounges and soda
fountains were added, and the dance floor was enlarged. An advertisement
announcing the gala reopening predicted "A premier audience of more than
20,000 persons—the expected attendance to be on hand for the gayest of all
openings!"
On the night of October 2, 1939, a
fire accidentally started behind the bandstand shortly after the band had taken
a break. The newly remodeled ballroom was reduced to ashes in what officials
called "the most sensational fire of the decade." The response of the
Los Angeles Fire Department was delayed by an address error. Incredibly, no one
was killed. The Barnet band lost most of its equipment in the fire. Their tune
"All Burned Up" was a dark-humor reference to the event. Count Basie
(who coincidentally was booked to perform at the venue two days later) lent
Barnet some of his charts after Barnet’s instruments, notes, and arrangements
had been destroyed in the flames.
Throughout his career, Barnet showed
open distaste for so-called ‘syrupy arrangements’. In the song "The Wrong
Idea" he lampooned the ‘sweet’ big band sound of the era. The song was
written by Billy May, who later poked fun (in collaboration with Stan Freberg)
at Lawrence Welk in the satirical recording of "Wunnerful!
Wunnerful!" The Barnet band was notorious for being a notorious
"party band," where drinking and carousing were not uncommon. While
Glenn Miller enforced strict standards of behaviour both on and off the
bandstand, Barnet was more interested in "having fun," according to
his autobiography, "Those Swinging Years."
In 1949, Barnet retired, largely
because of the changing musical tastes of the record-buying public and thanks
to his access to family riches as one of the few heirs of a very wealthy family.
In September 1964, Barnet arranged a private party for Duke Ellington at a Palm
Springs country club. At the door, a sign painted by Barnet read: "Any
complaints about loud music or requests for excessive use of mutes will be
grounds for instant expulsion (to a table in the parking lot). Any requests for
folk music, twist, watusi, or rock and roll will result in instant execution by
golf balls at 20 paces." Barnet did not play at the gathering.
Coda: Barnet was married an
astonishing eleven times (!) and stated in his autobiography "Those
Swinging Years," "I went through several marital fiascos, but they
were mostly Mexican marriages and quickly annulled because they weren't legal
in the first place."
His final marriage, to Betty
Thompson, lasted 33 years. It seems Charlie finally got it right in the
marriage department.
Charlie Barnet died from
complications of Alzheimer's disease and pneumonia at San Diego's Hillside
Hospital on September 4, 1991. He was 77.
Are you a lover of big band swing
music and want to listen to Charles Barnet’s famous songs? Then, tune into a
top big band swing music radio station like Swing Street
Radio.
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